It’s no secret that adjusting to life in one of the best clubs in the World is a hard task.But, when you’ve proved yourself as one of the best strikers in the World, and come with a value hovering around £60 to £70 million, the room for excuses reduces by each passing game.Wednesday’s Copa Del Rey quarter-final clash may have seen the Barcelona top Atletico Madrid in a narrow win at the Camp Nou, but it would mark another game in which Luis Suarez failed to live up to the huge expectations of the Catalanian giants.Slashing recklessly over the cross-bar from an exceptional ball delivered by Ivan Rakitic, he fell to the ground, head in his hands and made another contributions to his growing catalog of woes in Spain.Sporting the Blaugruna colours 16 times so far, he's hardly flopped—totalling 5 goals and dishing out 8 assists in La Liga, Copa Del Rey and the Champions League—but it remains a case of him not exactly emulating the best of his former self so far.Josep Maria Bartomeu, president of FC Barcelona, joined the coach Luis Enrique insisting that Suarez has time to grow into the big boots awaiting his filling at the club. "We have very high expectations, he is a great player. He has the support and the affection of the people", explained Bartomeu."The goals will come, there are no doubts with him", added Enrique. But, are the statements of those two key figures enough to suffice the growing doubts? It surely cannot tell the whole story.One of the pieces to solving the puzzle is the ban. Biting Giorgio Chiellini in a mad act during the summer's FIFA World Cup left him sidelined until October's El Clasico clash. Events were poised to unravel brightly when he assisted fellow South-American Neymar for an early goal. Since then though, it's been far from an exponential ascent.Poll: Will Luis Suarez find his feet at Barcelona?

The glimpses we saw of Suarez's magic have ignited some belief although the lack of it remains a nagging issue. Link-up with Neymar and Messi has the potential to rip apart numerous defences but the slump Barcelona found themselves in at the new year was a stumbling block for his career in the Spanish top flight.Adjusting to the new style of play will take time, of course. You don't need an expert to point out the significant differences in the way Liverpool play to how Barcelona do. At Anfield, he was the centre-piece, the cornerstone and the target man, but now he's sharing the spotlight with Neymar and Messi, which has both its pros and cons.But, while it remains to be grown, the adjustment is not all of it. What had the Spaniards worried was how Suarez was able to ghost past defenders, blitz on his trademark runs and then scuff it up when it comes to the big chances, surely that finishing cannot deter from moving clubs.Being a club of such stature, priding itself on reputation and avoiding radical decisions, there wasn't anything odd about Barcelona defending Suarez. They managed to engineer from the brink of a crisis to normality and potentially beyond, so should this situation be any different?Give it a season, but it's only a matter of time before Suarez begins to really flourish. It happens to the best of talents, and they get through. Suarez didn't make Liverpool, even though they added to his quality, at the core remains a fine player, it's just a time of manoeuvring past the rocky waters of the opening season.Facing a new challenge that presents itself with so much expectation will inevitably cause a struggle, but on the long term, Barcelona should reap their rewards, eventually. How long that "eventually" goes on for shall define Suarez's career.